Kaori wrote:That's a shame]Dune Messiah[/I] fairly well--particularly the end--and wouldn't have minded if the series had ended there.
uc pseudonym wrote:I was reading a piece of literary criticism recently that included a critique of the publishing industry. One of his basic points was that authors were pressured to turn everything into a series, and he listed a number of series that he felt had gone beyond a wise stopping point, including Dune. Of course, my opinion is incomplete until I finish the books that Frank Herbert penned (for the moment I do not intend to pursue his son's continuation), but I am inclined to believe that this may eventually become my feeling as well.
It'd be all like:
"Hey! You want to come over tonight?"
and they'd be all like:
"Sure! Where do you live?"
And we'd be all like:
"You know that Bio-dome out alittle west in the woods?"
And they'd be all like:
"... Yeah...?"
We'd say:
"There!"
Then they would slowly back away while we are all like:
Technomancer wrote:What are you reading now...?
ishy wrote:*puzzling over what 'Spike-Timing-Dependent Plasticity' is*
The time is the 1950s; the place, Barcelona. Daniel Sempere, the son of a widowed bookstore owner, is 10 when he discovers a novel, The Shadow of the Wind, by Julián Carax. The novel is rare, the author obscure, and rumors tell of a horribly disfigured man who has been burning every copy he can find of Carax's novels. The man calls himself LaÃn Coubert- the name of the devil in one of Carax's novels.
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